This past weekend, June 30, 2012, was watching the NYC area's "Antenna TV" affiliate WPIX-11.2 and the old Robert Wagner series from the late 60's, It Takes A Thief was on, two curious episodes filmed and aired in order from 1968 were also aired back-to-back at 9:00 pm and 10:00 pm EST on Saturday night:
"When Thieves Fall In" http://www.imdb.com/title/ tt0612784/ about impostors and doubles wherein femme con "Charlene 'Charlie' Brown" (Susan Saint James in a dual role) impersonates a British fashion model, "Sydnor Cavendish" who receives a fur coat, the Kavka Sable from an Eastern bloc Commissar, that contains a map of all the I.C.B.M. sites in Siberia, which is to be used in a plot by the Soviets to discredit the UK and Baltic States.
Unknown whether a hot dog made her lose C.O.N.T.R.O.L., though admittedly those Ukraine girls DO really knock me out!
Wagner himself also does several interesting characters, accents, especially when he gets dressed up as the hotel staff donning bellhop red uniform & hat, a fake 'stache completing the look, to which "Charlie"/"Sydnor"/Susan amusingly quips,
"You look like Sgt. Pepper!"
Wagner's hat is not unlike Ringo's as "Billy Shears" (as he originally portrayed him) on that LP cover and wears several fake moustaches as a "Mustachio Disguisey" in this episode, and as most of you know when you play the "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" (Reprise) on Side 2 backwards you hear, "...it was a fake moustache, it was a fake moustache, it was a fake moustache..."
but the business of Wagner's character "Alexander Munday" wearing them has more to do with the show's early episodes doing a "Mission: Impossible" type riff than with some collusion of the makers of Thief with The Beatles, or their management and handlers...right?
Chalk it up to 'coincidence'.
This episode was originally from February 27, 1968 on the ABC-TV network.
Then right afterwards, the next one up was the March 5, 1968 episode, "A Spot Of Trouble", again Wagner doing his ersatz "IMF" bit, this time as a Texas millionaire, while trying to discover who is murdering SIA agents - the henchman Ken Osmond for the swingin' photog played by none other than:
William Campbell.
The one and only, who was also the ONLY male onscreen to sing a duet with Elvis in his first Paramount silver screen feature, Love Me Tender (Do), married to Judith Exener, and after their divorce she became the mistress to both J.F.K. and mobster Sam Giancanna!Now the airing of these episodes, both in 1968 and 2012, in sequential order originally and back-to-back last weekend, could just be attributed to a colossal serendipity, but then what are the odds, and when you consider the subject matter, and the real-life connections then how stranger and more 'cosmic' can it get?
The first one, "When Thieves Fall In" was written by Leslie Stevens, the co-creator (with Joseph Stefano) of the original Outer Limits, and also co-creator (with Glen Larson) of the original Battlestar Galactica, both also ABC-TV network programming, as was Thief.
The other, "A Spot Of Trouble" was by Gene L. Coon, Gene Roddenberry's right hand man for NBC-TV's Star Trek.The homophonically named actor William Campbell himself aired in the Star Trek episode "The Squire Of Gothos", Season 1, Episode 17 (originally aired (January 12, 1967), and was frequently misidentified with Liberace, who the petulant alien space-child "Trelaine" was clearly based on.
Interesting, very interesting as Liberace may have been the first choice to play "Squire Trelane", as he would have been an instant ratings boost for the low rated show, like what happened when he appeared a few months earlier on the two-part (ABC-TV again) Batman.
As twin brothers "Chandell" and "Harry" his episodes "The Devil's Finger's" Season 2, Episode 15 (originally aired Wednesday October 26, 1966) and "Dead Ringers" Season 2, Episode 16 (originally aired Thursday October 27, 1966) and had the highest ratings of any of the Adam West-Burt Ward Batman series before or since.
To further confuse a target audience of already befuddled blue-haired ladies, the 'good' Chandell was also the former brothel piano playin' "Fingers", also a criminal and cheating by faking his ivory-tickling skills with a player piano, and whom the real bad-ass (no pun) bro "Harry" planned to kill in the course of the episodes, substitute himself in his stead
To further confuse a target audience of already befuddled blue-haired ladies, the 'good' Chandell was also the former brothel piano playin' "Fingers", also a criminal and cheating by faking his ivory-tickling skills with a player piano, and whom the real bad-ass (no pun) bro "Harry" planned to kill in the course of the episodes, substitute himself in his stead
marry "Aunt Harriet", then kill her, "Bruce Wayne" and "Dick Grayson",
thus inheriting the Wayne fortune as sole survivor.
Note too that these Batman episodes were aired just 2 weeks before the alleged November 9, 1966 incident so that whole business of duplicates, doppelgangers, impostors, and "William Campbell" lore that later developed after the 1969 initial PID story in LIFE may have had origin(s), it's genesis if you will, based largely on ABC-TV (and NBC) prime-time sci-fi and fantasy programs circa 1966-68, other influences, and a confluence with 'real' world events.
Could be.
Now, after reading all of the above, you might conjecture that the purpose of this post, the whole
exercise, was to attempt to 'debunk' the whole PID theory, as evidence of influence of other
pop cultural events during the seminal stages of the ever-growing lore surrounding this 'mystery'
seems likely, and contamination since then quite conceivable as the story morphs into areas more and more incredible than just the tall-tales told by unhinged minds, or a simple pedestrian conspiracy.
I was going to finish it after typing "...and a confluence with 'real' world events."
Not so fast.
An even more unbelievable 'high weirdness' phenomena concludes this as an eerie postscript---
Masaru Emoto, Japanese researcher, claims that human consciousness has an effect on the molecular structure of water.
Emoto's water crystal experiments consist of exposing water in glasses to different words, pictures, or music, and then freezing and examining the aesthetics of the resulting crystals with microscopic photography.
Here's his site:http://www.life-enthusiast.com/twilight/research_emoto.htm
"REIKO: Have you come across a particular word or phrase in your research that you have found to be most helpful in cleaning up the natural waters of the world?
Could be.
Now, after reading all of the above, you might conjecture that the purpose of this post, the whole
exercise, was to attempt to 'debunk' the whole PID theory, as evidence of influence of other
pop cultural events during the seminal stages of the ever-growing lore surrounding this 'mystery'
seems likely, and contamination since then quite conceivable as the story morphs into areas more and more incredible than just the tall-tales told by unhinged minds, or a simple pedestrian conspiracy.
I was going to finish it after typing "...and a confluence with 'real' world events."
Not so fast.
An even more unbelievable 'high weirdness' phenomena concludes this as an eerie postscript---
Masaru Emoto, Japanese researcher, claims that human consciousness has an effect on the molecular structure of water.
Emoto's water crystal experiments consist of exposing water in glasses to different words, pictures, or music, and then freezing and examining the aesthetics of the resulting crystals with microscopic photography.
Here's his site:http://www.life-enthusiast.com/twilight/research_emoto.htm
"REIKO: Have you come across a particular word or phrase in your research that you have found to be most helpful in cleaning up the natural waters of the world?
Love is an active word and gratitude is passive. When you think of gratitude -- a combination of appreciation and thankfulness -- there is an apologetic quality. The Japanese word for gratitude is kan-sha, consisting of two Chinese characters: kan, which means feeling, and sha, apology. It's coming from a reverential space, taking a step or two back. I believe that love coming from this space is optimal love, and may even lead to an end to the wars and conflicts in the world. Kan-sha is inherent in the substance H2O -- an essential element for life."
Whether you agree with his supposition and subsequent findings or color him 'crackpot' matters not, as we not discussing (for the moment) water-crystals, Mr. Emoto,
or Peter Lorre,
but the influences on the PID story, and all things seemingly (quantum?) entangled with it.
The June 2007 album released almost 40 years to the day after Sgt. Pepper's and attributed to Sir Paul McCartney, Memory Almost Full had a song on it entitled "Gratitude", with the lyrics "...love by you, show my gratitude...", so you can just imagine my surprise and utter puzzlement after going on YouTube and 'discovering' this vid not long afterwards:
Even if all the aforementioned television programming had a part, and many that are unknown by me and may be 'out there' radiating outwards into interstellar space a near half a century since first broadcast, in forming the different facets of the PID belief system, this one correlating the Japanese "love and gratitude" expression with thought experiments, water-crystal images, AND "William Campbell" is the most perplexing.
What, if anything does it mean?
Even if all the aforementioned television programming had a part, and many that are unknown by me and may be 'out there' radiating outwards into interstellar space a near half a century since first broadcast, in forming the different facets of the PID belief system, this one correlating the Japanese "love and gratitude" expression with thought experiments, water-crystal images, AND "William Campbell" is the most perplexing.
What, if anything does it mean?
Finally the recent FOX television series Fringe, a show that postulates an alternate parallel universe that co-exists with ours, with more or less equivalent duplicates on their version of Earth (a concept that goes back to comics' The Flash) main characters routinely zipping back and forth to the respective continuum's, had a character who was a colleague of the resident nutty professor "Dr. Walter Bishop" (John Noble) for several seasons named "William Bell"- Leonard Nimoy.
To J.J. Abrams and his Fringe writers the cosmic jape should be obvious:
"William (Camp) Bell" played by Star Trek actor Len N.
if this was done intentionally then they've a wicked sense of humor, and wasn't the first time that they were being so playful, as an agent was named "Lincoln Lee" in the second and third seasons, no doubt another Star Trek reference as actor Lee Bergere portrayed President Abraham Lincoln in the classic episode
"The Savage Curtain".
But, if as in the above esoteric example of Mr. Emoto' H2O crystals and the playback in reverse of a recent McCartney song, that these more likely exist independently of each other and do not form anything meaningful until someone takes the time and effort to find the commonality, "the missing link", then all the more a marvel.
What then, eh?
"The Savage Curtain".
But, if as in the above esoteric example of Mr. Emoto' H2O crystals and the playback in reverse of a recent McCartney song, that these more likely exist independently of each other and do not form anything meaningful until someone takes the time and effort to find the commonality, "the missing link", then all the more a marvel.
What then, eh?
There was even an LSD themed Yellow Submarine type episode featuring "Bell":
What was/is happening here? Your guess is as good, or better, than mine!
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